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Neil Young Pulling Music from Amazon, Calls for Boycott: "Support Your Community"
Music

Neil Young Pulling Music from Amazon, Calls for Boycott: “Support Your Community”

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Neil Young has had enough of Amazon.

The classic rocker has announced that he’ll be pulling his music from the massive online retailer, and is calling for a boycott of the Jeff Bezos-founded company.

“FORGET AMAZON AND WHOLE FOODS. FORGET FACEBOOK. “BUY LOCAL. BUY DIRECT,” reads his post on the Neil Young Archives website. “BEZOS SUPPORTS THIS GOVERNMENT. IT DOES NOT SUPPORT YOU OR ME.”

Young’s message continues:

“The time is here.
FORGET AMAZON.
Soon my music will not be there. It is easy to buy local. Support your community.
Go to the local store.
Don’t go back to the big corporations who have sold out America.
We all have to give up something to save America from the Corporate Control Age it is entering.
They need you to buy from them.
Don’t.
They shut down our government
your income
your safety
your family’s health security.
Take America Back
together, stop buying from the
big corporations
support local business.
Do the right thing. Show who you are.”

It has yet to be revealed if Young is just pulling his music from the Amazon Music streaming platform, or if he’ll be removing his physical products from the store as well.

Of course, this isn’t the first time Young has pulled his music from a platform. It was back in 2022 when he demanded that his music be removed from Spotify over misinformation about vaccines spread on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast. Just last year, he announced his unenthusiastic return to the streaming platform after Rogan’s podcast was no longer exclusive to Spotify.

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In regard to Facebook, it was in August of this year when Young ceased all activities on his official Facebook page in response to a Reuters report revealing that Meta’s AI chatbots have been permitted to have “romantic or sensual” conversations with minors.

His rage against the current administration was on full display last month with the official release of the new song, “Big Crime,” which calls out Donald Trump for (among other things) “fascist crimes,” adding the declaration, “Don’t want soldiers on our streets.”

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Neil Young pulling discography from Amazon Music
Music

Neil Young pulling discography from Amazon Music

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Neil Young has announced that he is removing his discography from Amazon Music – find out more below.

  • READ MORE: Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025: a no frills set that proves that sometimes, the old ways are the best

In January 2022, Neil Young announced that he would be removing his music from Spotify after episodes of Joe Rogan’s controversial podcast spread misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccines. At the time, Joe Rogan’s podcast was signed exclusively to Spotify.

He reluctantly returned to the streaming platform in 2024 after Apple Music and Amazon picked up the podcast. Young said at the time: “Spotify, the #1 streaming of low res music in the world – Spotify where you get less quality than we made, will now be home of my music again.”

“My decision comes as music services Apple and Amazon have started serving the same disinformation podcast features I opposed at Spotify. I cannot just leave Apple and Amazon, like I did with Spotify, because my music would have very little streaming outlet to music lovers at all.”

Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Derek Bremner for NME

Now, however, Young has announced that his music will be leaving Amazon “soon”. He wrote in a new entry on his Neil Young Archives blog: “The time is here. FORGET AMAZON. Soon my music will not be there. It is easy to buy local. Support your community. Go to the local store. Don’t go back to the big corporations who have sold out America.”

He then went on to urge his fans to boycott corporations like Amazon, Meta – who owns Facebook and Instagram – and Whole Foods. Young deactivated his Facebook and Instagram accounts over Meta’s reported “unconscionable use of chatbots with children” earlier this year.

Young wrote of his boycott plea: “We all have to give up something to save America from the Corporate Control Age it is entering. They need you to buy from them. Don’t. They shut down our government, your income, your safety, your family’s health security. Take America back together, stop buying from the big corporations. Support local business. Do the right thing. Show who you are.”

He also quit X/Twitter in late 2023 after Elon Musk appeared to endorse an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory. On his website, he wrote: “We are stopping all use of X we can control. For reasons that should be obvious to the richest man on Earth, we are taking this action against his company.”

Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025, photo by Derek Bremner
Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Derek Bremner for NME

Earlier this summer, Neil Young and The Chrome Hearts headlined Glastonbury 2025 and topped the bill at BST Hyde Park in London. They also played a concert at Malahide Castle in Dublin, among numerous other European dates.

In a four-star review of Young’s return to the Pyramid Stage at Glasto, NME described the performance as “a headline set that proves that sometimes, there’s still power to be found in an old-school approach”.

“It is, in short, the definition of no frills,” it read. “It’s testament to the power of Young’s songwriting, then, just how brilliantly it all works, how little the momentum drops.”

Young released his first studio album with the Chrome Hearts, ‘Talkin To The Trees’, in June.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Katy Perry performs onstage in 2025. (Credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Katy Perry)
Music

Social Media Built the Stage For Artists, but Now It’s Pulling the Plug

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Today’s live music industry is at an inflection point. Global acts that once sold out stadiums in mere seconds, like Beyoncé and Katy Perry, seem to be facing unexpected ticket sales challenges, such as sluggish demand. Beloved bands like the All-American Rejects are opting to play backyard gigs in the heart of their communities rather than traditional venues. 

These artists are most definitely not in decline, as they’re all cultural icons with both global recognition and massive online audiences. So how is it that in an era of constant visibility, even the biggest names in music are finding it harder than ever to fill seats?

The disconnect has nothing to do with demand. It’s about how artists reach their fans and how the platforms they rely on have quietly reshaped the artist-fan relationship. Visibility has never been higher, but connection has never felt thinner. 

Today’s musicians are relying on borrowed platforms that weren’t designed for them. The result is a system that strips them of control, weakens fan relationships, and leaves potential revenue on the table. It’s time to rethink the artist-fan relationship, and not as a content stream but as a community. And it should be one that acts can truly own.

The Broken Feedback Loop of Social Media

Social media was sold as the great equalizer. Post the right thing and you could blow up overnight. In practice, it’s created a race to the bottom where the loudest win and the most original often burn out.

These platforms reward trend-chasing over creativity and consistency. Even the biggest creators have no access to their own fan data. They can’t email them, text them, or reach them on demand. And when something actually matters, like selling a tour or moving merchandise, there’s no guarantee the algorithm will come through and surface your posts.

For the artists, this is beyond frustrating. It proves it’s a broken system. Social media has turned fans into followers and followers into passive metrics. Now compare that to the early internet with fan clubs, forums, and mailing lists—genuine communities where fans felt seen and where artists built loyalty that lasted longer than any feed refresh..

Beyoncé accepts the Best Country Album award for Cowboy Carter onstage during the 67th Grammy Awards. (Credit: JC Olivera/WireImage)

Rented Land, Vanishing Control

Artists are running their careers on infrastructure they don’t own. This means artists have surrendered control of their most valuable asset—their fan relationships. Fan data is split across ticketing platforms, streaming services, merch shops, and many more channels, none of which are shared or connected. That would be like a restaurant chain where each location uses a different system and none of them know if the same customer has visited before.

No successful direct-to-consumer brand would do that. So why would an artist?

Some artists are already making the shift. From Latin America to the U.S., they’re using new tools, like the one we’re building at Sesh and platforms like Discord that let them communicate directly with fans. No app download. No algorithm interference. Just a real channel they control. Social media will never go away, but it will stop being the foundation. It becomes the flyer, not the venue.

The Superfan Economy Is Already Here

Goldman Sachs estimates the superfan economy will be worth more than $4.3 billion in the next few years. These are the fans who want more than the music. They want access. They want to participate. And they’re willing to pay for it.

Musicians who know who their top fans are and know how to actually reach them will win in the long run. Those who don’t will be left shouting into the void. Direct-to-fan tools are no longer optional. They’re the difference between surviving and thriving. Artists using these platforms are already building vibrant communities with nothing more than a phone number and a clear vision.

The real value isn’t just financial—it’s creative autonomy. When you’re not dependent on algorithms, you can create what matters to you instead of chasing whatever the platform rewards this month. You can experiment and know your fans will show up regardless.

The message is simple: Stop renting your fans. True freedom means owning your audience.

The acts that will thrive in this next decade won’t be the ones with the most followers. They’ll be the ones who build the deepest, strongest fan relationships. 

The tools are here. The shift is already happening. It’s just a matter of choosing to own it.

Pepe del Río is co-founder and CEO of Sesh.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Sylvan Esso Is Pulling Its Catalog From Spotify
Music

Sylvan Esso Is Pulling Its Catalog From Spotify

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Sylvan Esso is the latest high-flying act to yank their catalog from Spotify.

The two-time Grammy Award-nominated electro-pop act is boycotting the streaming music giant, confirming their move with the announcement of their new release, “WDID,” their first in three years.

Led by Amelia Meath and Nick Sanborn, Sylvan Esso has accumulated close to one billion Spotify streams, across four full-length studio albums, including 2020’s Free Love and 2017’s What Now, both of which were nominated for best dance/electronic album at the Grammys. Going forward, Sylvan Esso’s streaming footprint will be wiped.

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The new track, “WDID,” is the first release on the band’s own record label, Psychic Hotline, announced back in 2021.

Released today, Sept. 30, “WDID” was hewn from an “intense period of creation and experimentation” for Meath and Sanborn, reads a statement from the band, and is delivered as an “abrasive, all-caps confrontation against an all-consuming cascade of crises”. It won’t, of course, be available on Spotify.

The fresh cut was recorded at Sylvan Esso’s own studio, Betty’s, in Chapel Hill, NC, and features additional production from Jake Luppen (Hippo Campus, Samia). Its official music video is helmed by Aaron Anderson and Eric Timothy Carlson.

Sylvan Esso joins an exodus of artists from Spotify, many chiding the company’s Sweden-born founder and CEO Daniel Ek, who reportedly invested $1 billion into Helsing, a defense company that sells AI software to inform military situations. A spokesperson for Helsing insists its technology isn’t being used in war zones outside of Ukraine.

The artist revolt includes Massive Attack, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Deerhoof, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, and others.

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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Deradoorian Joins Spotify Exodus, Pulling Music From Platform
Music

Deradoorian Joins Spotify Exodus, Pulling Music From Platform

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Deradoorian is the latest artist to pull music from Spotify. The singer-songwriter and former Dirty Projectors member cited chief executive Daniel Ek’s weapons investments—the main motive for the recent exodus—and alluded to recent online content accusing the platform of expanding its music usage rights. Spotify clarified in a statement that Spotify for Artists terms have not changed, and said those terms do not govern artists’ music rights.

Many of Deradoorian’s albums have already been taken down from Spotify but, she noted, remain available to stream and buy elsewhere. Her statement begins, “Since Spotify came along, I have always felt skeptical and opposed to their platform. Because it became the norm, I felt like I had to just put up with it and take what I could get. Perhaps that was true more so in the nascent stages of my solo career, but it doesn’t feel that way now.” She added that Ek’s investment in the artificial-intelligence weapons contractor Helsing prompted her to dig into other issues around the platform, such as the way Spotify uses artists’ music. The “slow erosion,” she wrote, of “our perceived ownership over our music—and the way its profits were used—was now too egregious to ignore.” Deradoorian admitted she did not conduct intensive research but said, “We all know that Spotify practices bad business. So, I just made the choice to stop it.”

In an email, a Spotify spokesperson said: “You might be seeing some misinformation online about a ‘change’ to the Spotify for Artists’ Terms of Use. These claims are false.” The spokesperson clarified that confusion about music usage rights revolves around a phrase that appears prominently in its terms of use: “user content.” That refers not to artists’ music but to listener content: “things like listener-created playlist covers, podcast comments, and playlist titles,” according to the statement. Terms of use for listeners—not artists—were recently updated, the spokesperson added.

Last week, Massive Attack became the biggest artist yet to announce its departure from Spotify, primarily citing Ek’s investment in Helsing. They also shared a separate statement about joining No Music for Genocide, which calls for artists to geoblock their music in Israel. (Spotify for Artists has clarified that Helsing is not involved in Gaza.) The band joined an exodus that includes Hotline TNT, Young Widows, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, WU LYF, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Xiu Xiu, and Deerhoof.

For the avoidance of doubt, Deradoorian concludes her statement, “I do not support AI technology that’s built to spy on us, create weapons to kill us, and utilize psychological tactics to dumb us down to the point of not questioning our reality and devolving our neural connections. It’s important to employ your mental faculties and ability to question in these times and I am trying harder to do that more consistently.”

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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